Healthier Breakfast & Lunch Ideas for Kids

Helping your child eat healthier lunches and breakfasts on school days is one of the best back-to-school “supplies” you can provide. Studies suggest kids who eat “brain food” may have an educational advantage. Get a head start with our great tips.

Breakfast First

It may arguably be the most important meal of the day. Studies suggest kids who eat breakfast:

tend to have healthier diets

may have improved short-term memory

are more attentive

are more energetic in the morning

may have fewer discipline problems

Make a nutritional breakfast with these quick ideas:

Spread peanut butter on a warmed whole-wheat tortilla. Fill it with sliced bananas or apples.

Save time and enjoy great taste with a bowl of whole-grain cereal…amp up the nutrition with fruit on top or serve on the side.

Toast a whole-wheat waffle. Spoon blueberries or strawberries over the top.

Meals at School Have an Impact

As much as one-third of your child’s nutritional needs may be eaten while he or she is at school. It’s important to know what to put in those healthy lunches for kids or what the best breakfast for your child is to keep them attentive and alert in the classroom. Serve and encourage foods that feed your kids’ brains as well as their bodies. Partner with your crew to put together healthy meals this school year.

Lunch: Baggers and Buyers

Whether your kids bring a brown bag lunch or buy, chances are they would love to have good-looking, great-smelling, incredibly tasty food. It can happen.

Think color. Minimize the earth tones, and bring on a rainbow of colors. The more hues and the brighter their intensity, the better the meal. Select in-season fruits and vegetables.

Think differently. Look for ways to add surprise and delight to the usual lunch fare. Anyone can have a cheese sandwich, so why not spice it up with sliced cucumbers and a hummus spread?

Or step out of the sandwich mode and try pretzel rods wrapped in dill cream cheese and honey-roasted turkey slices, or pack pasta salad with diced chicken, celery and a hint of curry. These kinds of ideas should perk up any lackluster “lunchster.”

Plan. Arrange lunches ahead of time—together. For baggers: Design a week’s worth of lunch menus. For buyers: Review the school menu and select “best choices.”

Communicate. Talk about the good things healthy foods can do for the body—things kids care about such as shiny hair, clear skin, strength and muscle power.